Facebook
has never been shy when it comes to showing off its acquisition hunger.
After the jawdropping WhatsApp deal and a potentially game-changing
Oculus VR acquisition, the company has now bought PrivateCore, a
security solutions company.
What
exactly drew Facebook’s interest in the company, that’s clearly not as
mainstream as WhatsApp and Oculus, but could play a more crucial role in
Facebook the social network? And most Facebook users would be most
concerned about what happens to the world’s most popular social network?
PrivateCore
has developed something called vCage which secures servers in untrusted
environments from persistent malware, malicious hardware devices, and
insider threats. vCage protects private and public cloud accounts, which
are typically spread across the world, in various locations. The entire
infrastructure which could be compromised through attacking just one
compute node, which is what vCage prevents.
“Working
together with Facebook, there is a huge opportunity to pursue our joint
vision at scale with incredible impact. Over time, Facebook plans to
deploy our technology into the Facebook stack to help protect the people
who use Facebook,” the company’s CEO Oded Horovitz said on the
PrivateCore website.
In
the light of the NSA revelations, major Internet companies have been
ramping up plans to make HTTPS encryption default on their websites.
Google has been moving the fastest, while Facebook also made HTTPS
default, but PrivateCore’s technology will allow Facebook to deploy
system-wide encryption faster. Facebook’s Chief Security Officer, Joe
Sullivan, pointed out this advantage in a post. “Their vCage technology
protects servers from persistent malware, unauthorized physical access,
and malicious hardware devices, making it safer to run any application
in outsourced, hosted or cloud environments. The team at PrivateCore is
also made up of top-notch security veterans with a lot of experience.”
While
on the face of it, this fits in with Facebook’s expansion plans for the
near future, it could also be used for Internet.org, where Mark
Zuckerberg is one of the primary backers. The project which aims to
bring the next 5 billion people online, has already started taking baby
steps with a free Internet plan in Africa, and it could be taken
elsewhere too. Here too, Facebook could use PrivateCore’s vCage to make
connections more secure.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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